Misplaced Pages

Tuyutí

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
For the battle, see Battle of Tuyutí.

Tuyutí (Portuguese: Tuiuti), "white mud" in guaraní, is a marsh with a pond located in the southwest corner of Paraguay. It became famous during the Paraguayan War, while the allied army bivouacked on it for two years. The Battle of Tuyutí in 1866 was the biggest battle ever fought in South America and the deadliest day in the Americas history. The smaller Second Battle of Tuyutí was also fought there.

The ground is sandy, surrounded by flooded terrain, with rocks with more than 2 meters high. The land where the encampment stood was a small space of 4 by 2.4 km without maneuver space.

In the south is the marsh Bellaco and, to the west, the lake Piris. It is linked to the Paraguay river town of Curupayty, reached by a 1.5 km long track. To the north is the marsh Rojas and the Tuyutí lake, and to the east a large marshy region.

References

  1. Doratioto 2003, p. 222.
  2. Doratioto 2003, p. 214-216.
  3. Doratioto 2003, p. 216.

Sources

27°12′14.3″S 58°32′53.16″W / 27.203972°S 58.5481000°W / -27.203972; -58.5481000


Stub icon

This Paraguay location article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: